Author Signing: Leigh Jones & Rhiannon Meyers

09/18/2010 10:00 am
09/18/2010 12:00 pm

Infinite MonsterLeigh Jones and Rhiannon Meyers sign Infinite Monster: Courage, Hope, and Resurrection in the Face of One of America's Largest Hurricanes.

Endorsed by Douglas Brinkley (author of The Great Deluge), and Paul Burka (the Executive Editor of Texas Monthly), Infinite Monster is compiled from private interviews of Galvestonians who survived Hurricane Ike.  Their stories expose the destitution of loss, the politics of recovery and the revelry of rebirth.

Award-winning Galveston County Daily News (www.galvnews.com) reporters Leigh Jones and Rhiannon Meyers spent a year writing about the storm's devastating aftermath and were part of the Galveston County Daily News team that won the 2009 Star Breaking News award from the Texas Associated Press for their hurricane coverage.  In the book, Jones & Meyers depict survivors returning to the island through toxic debris and a seemingly endless bureaucracy.  They liken Ike to “a phantom reincarnation of its 1900 ancestor”.

No event in Galveston’s modern history has forced the city to redefine its identity and future direction like Ike has.  The authors pose some hard questions, most of which have yet to be answered, but one thing is certain — Hurricane Ike was like the Infinite Monster (www.infinitemonster.com) that would forever cloud the Gulf Coast's future. 

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ISBN-13: 9780982315248
Availability: Out of Print
Published: Penlandscott Publishers, 6/2010

In 2008, Hurricane Ike swept the sea into Galveston Bay, submerging 75 percent of Galveston, shredding entire buildings to splinters and turning rich and poor alike into unwilling expatriates of the island home they loved.

Award-winning Galveston County Daily News reporters Leigh Jones and Rhiannon Meyers, flooded out of their own homes, share an insider’s view of a disaster largely forgotten amid America’s deepening economic meltdown.

On the very eve of the collapse of Lehman Brothers, the first major financial institution to fall in the recession, Ike erased an entire city on the Bolivar Peninsula and brought Texas’ largest medical school — Galveston’s only general hospital and its largest employer — to its knees.

Little more than a century had passed since a nameless storm destroyed the bustling port town, killing more than 6,000 and catapulting Houston toward economic boom.  The survivors of the 1900 Storm resurrected the island, raising it by 17 feet behind an impenetrable seawall.  But the city’s bay side remained an unprotected, open path for Ike.

From their harrowing rides beside rescuers on dark and deluged streets, through scores of private interviews that expose the politics of recovery, the destitution of loss, and the revelry of rebirth, Jones and Meyers deliver the story of one of America’s largest hurricanes through the voices of those who lived it:  grief-stricken families, heroic helicopter pilots, exhausted leaders, beleaguered public housing residents, courageous survivors, doomed disbelievers.

Some drowned, some were plucked by helicopter from raging water, some left and never returned.  Those who did come back waded not only through mounds of toxic debris, but also through dense and seemingly endless bureaucracy that threatened to stifle recovery before it even began.

Like a phantom reincarnation of its 1900 ancestor, Hurricane Ike became an Infinite Monster that would forever cloud the future of the Texas coast.

Location: 
Street:
Katy Budget Books
Additional:
2450 Fry Rd
City:
Houston
,
Province:
Texas
Postal Code:
77084
Country:
United States